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I 572: Marble Fragment: Prytany List

Inscribed fragment. Broken all round. Parts of seven lines of the inscription preserved. Pentelic marble. ADDENDA I 4335 belongs. Already published as IG II2, no. 1788. Found in Byzantine context, south ... 174/5 A.D.

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MC 1273: Turkish Pipe

About half of bowl broken, and a large chip missing from stem socket. Blackened and encrusted by use on inside. Round bowl with no offset from rim; thickened lip; stem socket flattens into reinforcement ... 29 April 1933

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S 305: Head of Youth

Head of a youth with most of the left side of the face and head broken away. Nose, chin and cheek chipped, and the head broken off at the base of the neck. The finish of the way hair on top and at the ... 13 March 1933

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S 306: Relief Fragment with Figures in Procession

Left side dressed smooth; back rough-picked; other edges broken. Three standing figures face right; in front of the second and third are two small children; at the right edge of the fragment is part of ... 14 March 1933

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S 320: Head Fragment of Female Figure

Small head, from the Altar of Ares series (?), broken at base of neck and at top, back and right side of head; left cheek, mouth and chin preserved. Head tilted slightly toward the right. Pentelic marble ... 29 March 1933

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S 327: Grave Relief Fragment with Seated and Standing Female Figures

Broken off at the top, at the shoulders of both figures; back and bottom rough-picked; sides fine-picked. Surface very much worn. The figure to the right, seated on a stool, faces left, her left hand resting ... 3 April 1933

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P 1862: Amphora with Graffiti

Narrow neck and both handles broken away. Crudely and irregularly made; the bottom rounded, the lower part of the body covered with broad shallow horizontal ridges, the upper part with narrower, deeper ... 21 April 1933

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P 1863: Amphora with Graffito

Mended from many pieces; one handle missing. The short neck has no lip, but simply a straight plain edge. Inscribed Ε Ι on the shoulder, as P 1862, rather more neatly, but with the letters upside down ... 21 April 1933